U.S. Rep. Bruce Poliquin asked a federal judge to order a new election in the 2nd Congressional District if an injunction is not granted to declare ranked-choice voting unconstitutional and him the winner.

U.S. Rep. Bruce Poliquin asked a federal judge to order a new election in the 2nd Congressional District if an injunction is not granted to declare ranked-choice voting unconstitutional and him the winner.

The new election was requested in an amended complaint filed by Poliquin’s attorneys at about 10 p.m. Tuesday in U.S. District Court in Bangor. It was the latest legal twist in Poliquin’s efforts to reverse the results of the Nov. 6 election, which he lost to Jared Golden in the nation’s first federal race decided by ranked-choice voting.

The legal complaints from Poliquin’s Washington, D.C., attorney, Lee Goodman, argue that ranked-choice voting violates the U.S. Constitution’s guarantees to due process and equal protection as well as the Voting Rights Act of 1965.

Golden’s attorney, James Kilbreth, responded Wednesday in a brief that called Poliquin’s legal challenge to ranked-choice voting “sour grapes.”

“Now, after 296,077 Maine citizens have voted based on their understanding that the [ranked-choice voting] system would be used to determine the winner of the election, Poliquin would like to change the rules,” he wrote.

“Poliquin’s sour grapes preliminary injunction is too little, too late, and is outweighed by the injury to the thousands of Maine voters who selected Golden over Poliquin and who would be disenfranchised by Poliquin’s attempt to use the courts to overturn the results of the election,” Kilbreth said. “Further, the chaos, disruption, and violation of fundamental rights that would result from Poliquin’s attempt to rewrite the rules after the election is anathema to the public interest. Golden won the election fair and square.”

Kilbreth urged U.S. District Judge Lance Walker to reject Poliquin’s motion for a preliminary injunction that Secretary of State Matt Dunlap declare the incumbent congressman the winner along with the congressman’s arguments that ranked-choice voting violates the U.S. Constitution.

Dunlap’s attorney, Assistant Attorney General Phyllis Gardiner, said in her brief that none of Poliquin’s challenges to the constitutionality of ranked-choice voting “has any merit.”

“There is no constitutional basis for rejecting this electoral result,” Gardiner said. “Jared Golden should be free to present his credentials to the incoming Congress, which has the ultimate authority to decide whether to seat him as the representative of Maine’s Congressional District 2.”

The new complaint added Gov. Paul LePage as a defendant because he is required to certify election results. The complaint alleges that he may not issue a certificate of election while the results are contested in court. The original complaint only named Dunlap, the state’s election administrator, as a defendant.

The request for a new election if the injunction is denied is one of the only major differences in Poliquin’s latest complaint.

Walker will hold a hearing on the motion for the injunction at 10 a.m. Wednesday, Dec. 5, in Bangor. He is poised to make a decision before the Dec. 14 deadline when election results, certified by the governor or the secretary of state, must arrive at the U.S. House of Representatives.

Golden won the election in Maine’s 2nd District with 50.62 percent of the vote to Republican Poliquin’s 49.38 percent following the tabulation of ranked-choice ballots at the Maine secretary of state’s office in Augusta since neither Golden nor Poliquin claimed a majority of 2nd District voters’ first choices in the four-way race. The race also featured independents Tiffany Bond and Will Hoar.

Walker has granted intervenor status to Golden and Bond.

Bond’s attorney, James G. Monteleone of Portland, said Wednesday in his brief that Walker should dismiss Poliquin’s lawsuit as untimely because it was filed after Election Day.

The Campaign Legal Center of Washington, D.C., late Wednesday afternoon filed a friend of the court brief in the case opposing Poliquin’s claims.

The organization described itself as “a leading nonpartisan, nonprofit election law organization [that] litigates, develops policy, and advocates on a range of democracy issues, including by participating in voting rights cases across the country.”

Attorneys for the center said that Poliquin and other plaintiffs “offer no reason, other than their mere say so, to explain why the phrase ‘by the people’ must mean only a plurality of the people. Indeed, the Supreme Court has suggested, consistent with the argument above, that states may choose either a majority or plurality vote requirement.”

The state’s ranked-choice voting system is constitutional, according to the brief.

“Maine’s decision to adopt ranked choice voting falls squarely within its power under the Elections Clause and is entirely consistent with the Constitution’s requirement that members of the House be elected ‘by the people, according to the brief.

Walker allowed Poliquin’s underlying lawsuit challenging ranked-choice voting to go forward in his 16-page ruling denying the congressman’s motion to stop the ballot count. It touched on some of Poliquin’s constitutional objections to the voting method, in which voters rank their choices for office and their rankings are used to conduct instant runoffs, but did not directly address whether the voting method violates the U.S. Constitution.

No court has specifically addressed those arguments, but last year, the Maine Supreme Judicial Court said the method ran afoul of the Maine Constitution as it pertained to statewide general elections, though it cleared the way for ranked-choice voting in the June primaries and did not address the method’s use in federal elections.

Legal experts have said that Poliquin faces an uphill battle because Walker denied the original request to stop the voting process and because Maine voters have twice supported ranked-choice voting at the ballot box.

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